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December 04, 1987 - Image 30

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-12-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

CLOSE-UP

COME IN FOR
YOUR EXCITING
NEW HAIRCUT
AND COLOR

AIDS

Continued from Page 28

Arrive Early For
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Conditioner

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NIGHT

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• Interest paid semi-annually

• Redeemable after 5 years at 100%

Non-callable for 5 years

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• Minimum rate 7.5%—no maximum

• Due November 1, 1992

A driving financial force,
Ampal-American Israel Corporation
enables Israel to grow productively.

confidential testing that is ac-
companied by counseling and
anti-discrimination
safeguards, prevention and
education programs, outreach
to victims and their families
to include food, clothing and
"sympathetic listening" area
coalitions for action pro-
grams, nursing home, hospice
and home care as an alter-
native to expensive hospital
care, and "dramatic expan-
sion" of government drug
treatment programs to help
prevent the spread of AIDS
through intravenous drug
abuse.
Judy Lipshutz became in-
volved in the AIDS crisis as a
professional. For the last five
years she has served as coor-
dinator of a venereal disease
action coalition for United
Community Services in
Detroit, and now also coor-
dinates the AIDS Related
Communications Coalition.
Lipshutz, who is a member
of New Jewish Agenda which
adopted an AIDS statement

For further information about Ampal, your American
corporate connection to Israel, and a prospectus, call:

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wherein the underwriter may lawfully offer the securities.

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30

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1987

AIDS Help

Persons needing infor-
mation or assistance on
AIDS can call Rabbi
Blumenthal at Temple
Beth El, 851-1100; or
Wellness Networks,
547-9040, or toll-free,
1-800-872-2437.

THE DIASPORA, Immmm•

Al Schonwetter

Representative, Anal Securities Corporation

11/2 years ago, believes that
the general Jewish popula-
tion has to overcome the
myths and stereotypes
associated with AIDS. "It is
not just homosexuals that are
getting AIDS," she says. "We
need to recognize all the
Jewish responses to help the
needy and the sick."
"People deserve," Lipshutz
says, "to live Jewishly, and to
reeive a Jewish response
when they become ill." She
says that New Jewish Agen-
da is trying to support AIDS
networks so that there is a
Jewish presence for Jewish
patients and families.

Golden Age Endures
For Gibraltar's Jews

DAVID LANDAU

G

ibraltar — As in most
synagogues, the gos-
sip in Nefutsot
Yehudah centers on whether
the man sitting in the front
row will run for office yet
again.
But in Nefutsot Yehudah,
the office in question is not
gabbai (or parnas, as it is call-
ed there), but of chief minister
of the government.
An Israeli reporter recently
visiting was reluctant to
trespass on the special Sab-
bath ambience by asking Sir
Joshua Hassan straight out
about his plans. Next morn-
ing, however, at the delectable
Jewish patisserie around the
corner, the reporter seemed to
have his answer.
The chief minister, dapper
in Sunday cravatte and
tweeds, amiably kissed each
of the shop girls as they wrap-
ped his bread and cakes. A
bodyguard, dour and discreet,
followed him out.
But Gibraltar's politics are
apparently not so easily
deciphered. The shop girls,
'quite unflustered, made it
clear to the newsman that
they expect the weekly kisses
to continue whether or not
Sir Joshua decides to prolong
his 30-year rule over this
rock. They simply like him
Everybody seems to like
everybody in Gibraltar, which

makes it such a pleasant
place to visit — and to live on,
too, despite its tininess, 2.1
miles in area and 1,396 feet
high.
On Shabbat morning, after
services have ended at the
four synagogues and the
youth minyan at the Jewish
school, the entire Jewish com-
munity (about 600 souls)
seem to be out on Main
Street, strolling and exchang-
ing smiles and small talk
with their non-Jewish
friends. About 30,000 people
live on the rock.
At the Convent, the official
residence of the British gover-
nor, they may pause to inspect
the solitary guard, marching
up and down in his mirror-
polished boots. Rachel
Benisso, whose husband
Abraham is a cantor famous
throughout the Sephardi
world, remembers when her
son Isaac was in the army (the
Gibraltar Regiment) and took
his turn to stand guard there.
She would bring him a pot of
steaming hamim (cholent) to
the guard room across the
street.
Gibraltar is unique in many
ways. A last bastion — literal-
ly and metaphorically — of
the British Empire, the
British fleet and army still
stand guard there over the en-
trance to the Mediterranean
Sea. On Main Street, Marks
and Spencer and British
Home Store ensure that this

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